Full-resolution NORM ED image of Sioux Falls, South Dakota. Light lines are boundaries of 1,020-m cells, the unit of averaging for the national image. The 1-mile section-line road grid is
and in some places climate (northern
Applications Environmental Assessment
Among these are
concentration of natural drainage, production of dust, introduction of
Roads also
construction of dwellings, introduction of domestic additional roads. It has been estimated
of the land area of the conterminous United States.
distance-to-road measure is particularly helpful in estimating the lateral reach and
Imposed fragmentation of the landscape is generally detrimental to
NORM ED measures human-induced fragmentation by roads and ignores other fragmentation types, including natural fragmentation. Because roads are the most common source of human-induced fragmentation, NORM ED
impacts on a national scale and a basis for comparing landscape patterns manipulated by humans to natural patterns.
Land Use and Land Cover Research
coupled. As the road
coupling to demographic and economic Their study
ahead.
Source Data and its Limitations
for the 2000 census. The origins of the data range from pre 1990 USGS quadrangle maps at 1:100,000-scale to
this is the most current dataset publicly
of the United States.
The centerfold map does not depict DTR
county boundaries; among these white
county boundaries and are depicted in DTR colors.
More Information
contact:
e-mail: phone: 970-226-9378
Distance to Nearest Road in the Conterminous United States
NORM-ED 1-km resolution image of southern Louisiana. Baton Rouge is the yellow patch in the northwest corner and New Orleans
Lakes Pontchartrain and Maurepas form the large green patch north of New Orleans, interrupted by only two roads. The Mississippi Delta extends to the southeast. The barrier islands stretching northeast and southwest from the delta are some of the places most remote from roads in the conterminous United States. Other green areas are nearly roadless coastal swamps.
U.S. Geological Survey Fact Sheet 2005-3011
January 2005
A New Dataset
Monitoring (GAM) program has
conterminous 48 states.
and intensity of road construction.
This indicator measures straight-line or Euclidean distance (ED) to the nearest
NORM ED. NORM ED data can be
for The National Map, The
fullresolution dataset for the conterminous
The North American Road Network Overview
on Earth. It consists of more than 4
The documented
approximately 1% of the land area of the United States, roughly the area of South Carolina.
Roads are the circulatory system of our culture.
processed goods, and to carry people to
friends.
and use.
Spatial
descriptions of the association of roads with their surroundings. NORM ED, in
roads.
The National Distance to Road Image Properties of the Image
The background on this page is an
road (DTR) for cells measuring 1,020 m (0.63 miles, nominally 1 km) on each side; 7.5 million 1-km cells are displayed. Each
full-resolution 30-m dataset. The same
on page 2.
Patterns of Open Space and Road Density
The northern of
the city of Rio Rancho.
road density) is colored blue. These conditions typically occur in areas where
making land highly accessible. Blue areas occur in all states, and are particularly prominent across the Great Plains; along
and to the west of the Cascade Mountains
in this DTR range.
represented in shades of blue-green or turquoise.
turquoise (ridges).
California.
lacking.
population. Shades of green represent areas remote
from roads. Most of these occur because Steep slopes
visible outside the city. Interstate 90 runs east-west just above image center.
(Rocky Mountains, Sierra Nevada), swamps (southern Florida and Louisiana),
Maine and Minnesota), have made road building difficult and expensive. Many of these places are preserved as National Parks (Yellowstone, Everglades) and Wilderness Areas. Nationally, these roadless areas are scarce, and they occur preferentially in the West.
Roads and traffic affect natural resources in dozens of ways. elimination of forest canopy, elevation of temperature, introduction of vehicular noise and pollution, diversion and
invasive species, and collision of vehicles with animals large and small. serve as the primary mechanism for conveyance of humans into the landscape,
with consequent resource extraction, initiation and extinction of fires,
animals, and building of
that roads ecologically affect 22% or more
Because the effects of roads extend beyond their rights-of-way, a
areal extent of ecological and hydrological effects of roads.
ecological integrity.
provides a resource for studies of human
In our society, human presence and vehicular access by road are tightly
New roads often are built to support new land uses. network changes, so does the mosaic of intervening roadless spaces. Scientific study of the processes of road-network extension and densification, and their
conditions, is just beginning. may provide valuable insights into environmental challenges that may lie
The NORM ED dataset is derived from the Bureau of Transportation Statistics/ Geographic Data Technology (BTS/GDT) roads dataset, which in turn was derived from the Bureau of Census TIGER files
recent datasets built using highly accurate Global Positioning System technology. Because the data have such mixed origins, they cannot be interpreted as uniform in resolution, quality, or age. Nevertheless,
available that describes the road network
Values Over Water
The downloadable NORM ED dataset includes DTR values over lakes and offshore. Over the oceans and Great Lakes, DTR was calculated to a range of 60 km, with extended ranges where necessary to cover roadless U.S. islands.
values for water areas that are outside
areas are oceans, the Great Lakes, and various estuaries. Other water areas, such as Utah's Great Salt Lake, fall within
For more information on NORM ED,
Raymond D. Watts USGS Fort Collins Science Center 2150 Centre Ave Bldg C Fort Collins, CO 80526-8118
the yellow patch in the center.
U.S. Department of the Interior
The USGS Geographic Analysis and
developed a national, high resolution dataset that gives the distance to the nearest road every 30 meters across the
This work provides the first unified national picture of roadless space, vehicular accessibility,
The new dataset is the first member of the National Overview Road Metrics (NORM) family of road related indicators.
road, and is given the compound name
viewed and downloaded from the transportation section of the web viewer
http://nationalmap.usgs.gov.
states is made up of 8.7 billion values.
The road network of the United States is one of the largest human constructions
million miles of mapped roads, plus many additional utility roads, 4-wheel-drive trails, and private routes. roads and their rights-of-way occupy
They are used to bring raw materials to processing sites, to distribute
their schools, workplaces, jobs, and The value of roads is reflected in
the significant size of the economic sectors—energy, automotive manufacturing, mining, and construction, among others—that support their building
The U.S. road network is little studied as an integrated object. relationships between the network and
intervening roadless areas are important to ecological and hydrological resources. The NORM indicators provide basic
particular, focuses not on the characteristics of the road network itself, but rather on the extent of spaces between
image of average values of distance to
cell averages 1,156 DTR values from the
image is reproduced in more vivid color
Areas of lowest distance to road (highest road density) appear in yellow. Most low DTR areas are in cities, but there are exceptions. For example, energy extraction activities have developed dense road networks in the oil and gas fields of West Texas and the Texas Panhandle; these appear as yellow arcs. two adjacent bright yellow areas in north central New Mexico is the product of road construction in advance of settlement in
Moderately low DTR (moderately high
terrain and vegetation are not impediments to road building, and where there is motivation—such as agriculture—for
the Snake River Plain in Idaho; in the Central and Imperial Valleys of California;
in the Pacific Northwest. The Atlantic Seaboard, outside of its many cities, falls
High DTR (low road density) is
The alternating valleys and ridges of the Appalachian Mountains create a pattern of blue (valleys) and
A broad swath of blue-green covers much of the arid lands of the West, from the sand hills of Nebraska to the deserts of Arizona, New Mexico, Nevada, and southeastern
Here agricultural productivity is low, and economic motivation for building a dense road network is generally
Across the Interior West, where higher road densities (blue or yellow) occur, there is an association with water availability for agriculture (along the Rio Grande in New Mexico, for example), natural resource extraction, or dense
of severe accessibility issues.
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Image PropertiesThis image depicts the average distance to nearest road
(DTR) value in 1-km squares for the lower 48 (conterminous)United States. Averages were calculated from the 30-meterresolution NORM ED dataset.
Average Distance to the Nearest Roadin the Conterminous United States